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why has philosophy ignored motherhood?

  • Written by Laura Kotevska, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Sydney

Over many seasons, I’ve observed a pair of masked lapwings hatch their chicks in a natural wetland close to my home. Nature did not prime these parents to care for their young. My lapwing neighbours would walk their downy chicks into the open and fly away when noisy miner birds approached. The weeks-old young were left to defend themselves from vicious, swooping attacks.

As I walked the wetland each day, I counted the young with a heavy heart: one day there were four, the next there would be two and a week later there were none.

In 2023, the first clutch of lapwing chicks survived into adolescence and I told everyone I knew.

I learned more about motherhood from witnessing these parenting failures – for example, the need to love, remain proximate, protect from predators and respond in instances of distress – than in anything I had encountered in all my years as a professional philosopher. Sure, I’d taught the standard arguments for and against abortion in ethics and given classes in bioethics on pregnancy management and maternal autonomy, but these topics had little to do with motherhood itself.

One of the reasons for this was that until I was readying myself for a child of my own, motherhood had not been salient to me as either a personal or philosophical question. The more significant reason was that motherhood – and the maternal body – rarely presented itself as a philosophical topic for exploration in the many classes and seminars I attended as a student and later, as an academic.

Yet in a tradition where life and health have spurred profound philosophical reflection – I have in mind Pascal’s migraines and Nietzsche’s breakdowns – how can the soul and body splitting event of childbirth be an unremarked upon subject of philosophy?

why has philosophy ignored motherhood?
How can the experience of childbirth be erased by philosophy? Olivia Anne Snyder/unsplash, CC BY-SA

Since antiquity, women have written philosophical texts and discussed philosophical topics. But through a centuries-long process of erasure, their philosophical concerns and their contributions to the discipline have been ignored and later, forgotten.

From the time of Aristotle, women were seen as subordinate to men. In philosophy, too, the norms of reason, the nature of philosophical inquiry and the topics of investigation were defined in opposition to anything feminine.

It is little surprise, then, that writings about the intense psychological, emotional, and identity transformations that take place during gestational and postpartum motherhood were largely sidelined within the discipline.

Yet a few remarkable women overcame misogynistic epistemic and disciplinary barriers to produce work that was recognised as philosophy, including some writing touching on the maternal experience.

Maternal empowerment

For Lady Damaris Masham, raised among Platonists in Cambridge in the mid-17th century, motherhood was a significant topic of moral and political philosophy.

According to Masham, the education of women and the development of their rational abilities was key to discharging the moral responsibilities of motherhood. Only through receiving a sound education could women effectively mother their children.

More than this, the responsibility to parent, she argued, should fall to women since the task “cannot be perform’d but by Mothers only”. Though this sounds regressive to our ears, Regan Penaluna, a contemporary philosopher and journalist, suggests it was a radical argument for domestic matriarchy. For Masham, men could not be entrusted to such a significant domestic and civic responsibility. The stability of society depended on well-raised children.

In this way, Masham’s views are a positive contrast to many of her male contemporaries, who ignored mothers, argued the origin of children’s dysregulation could be traced to women, or turned women’s bodies into sites of fear and contestation. (One noteworthy counterexample is 17th-century French philosopher François Poulain de la Barre who writes sympathetically about mothers’ responsibilities, their pains, and their wisdom).

Masham would invert many of these stereotypically male ideas to show maternal empowerment was needed for all to live well in this life.

Her two philosophical works, Discourse Concerning the Love of God and Occasional Thoughts in Reference to a Vertuous or Christian Life, were published anonymously, though occasionally misattributed to John Locke. He, too, wrote on parental responsibility. Masham, whose reflections on parenting were more incisive and radical, was largely ignored until recent decades.

‘I fear for my health’

As for Masham, a key philosophical topic for the 18th-century philosopher, mathematician, and physicist Émilie du Châtelet was women’s autonomy and access to education. In a book titled the Discourse on Happiness, du Châtelet examined the conditions that enabled or precluded women’s happiness, given the opportunities they were often denied.

She argued education and the feelings this gave rise to played an outsized role in women’s capacity to achieve worldly satisfaction. Finished in the months before du Châtelet became unexpectedly pregnant, she writes in the Discourse,

only study remains to console [a woman] for all the exclusions and all the dependencies to which she finds herself condemned.

Condemned, it seems, is how du Châtelet felt. Pregnant with her fourth child at 42, du Châtelet’s physical and social conditions were an organising principal of her life at this time.

why has philosophy ignored motherhood?
Madame Du Châtelet at her desk by Maurice Quentin de La Tour. Wikimedia Commons

In this period, she was singularly focused on completing her path-breaking commentary on Newton’s Principia. The dread of unfinished work, the social consequences of having a child with her lover, and the fear of a deadly pregnancy – “I fear for my health, and even for my life” – led her to work voraciously.

In her second trimester, she reported working 18-hour days. In the days before giving birth, she finalised the proofs for her commentary and sent these to the Bibliothèque du Roi, the national library, for their preservation.

A relatable anxiety about the postpartum period and an awareness of how life would change – either she would die in childbirth or need to reckon with how she might continue to work – are an ever-present topic in her correspondence from the time.

Writing to her lover Jean François de Saint-Lambert before the birth of their child, du Châtelet tells of profound pain and sadness: “my stomach is so terribly low, I feel such pain in my back. I am so sad this evening.”

The depth of this feeling is made clear when she returns to the subject at the close of her letter, dated to late August, 1749.

I am too unwell, I have an insupportable backache, and am prey to discouragement in the mind and in my whole person.

For the author of a Discourse on Happiness, it is little wonder her physical circumstances impacted her mental health and her intellectual work was a source of nourishment.

Of course, we see none of these musings in du Châtelet’s published work from this time. Why should a work of physics contain reflections on her pregnancy? This would make no more sense than for my own journal articles on epistemology to reveal the details of my birth plan. (Like du Châtelet’s, mine was “for myself and baby to live and be well.”)

But as historians of philosophy, we have long explored the social, intellectual and material conditions in which works were produced.

This is especially important in the context of uncovering the work of female philosophers. Understanding these conditions often underscores how remarkable their feats were. Astonishingly, du Châtelet’s translation and commentary, which became the standard text in France and galvanised support for Newtonianism, was finalised at a time during her pregnancy when I could do no more than watch Scandal and eat chips.

Sadly, our experiences would differ in other respects. Ten days after sending her manuscript and six days after giving birth, du Châtelet died of complications from childbirth.

Beyond the solitary thinker

If du Châtelet’s published work was silent on the topic of motherhood, where, then, are our writings on the experience of carrying, birthing and recovering?

Medieval mystic Margery Kempe conveys her experience of pregnancy illness and postpartum psychosis in her 14th-century eponymous work, The Book of Margery Kempe.

why has philosophy ignored motherhood? Penguin Pregnancy, labour and the early days of motherhood left her full of sickness and despair, and bereft of her “reason and her wits.” In painfully vivid terms, Kempe describes a long physical and psychological recovery, which catalysed a religious conversion. Kempe is a rarity. The maternal body has seldom been discussed in philosophy, yet many central topics would take radically different shape if it were both the subject and object of inquiry. For Mary Midgley, a mid-20th century British philosopher, Descartes’ scepticism and its resolution as cogito ergo sum (“I think therefore I am”) set epistemology on a centuries-long path of trying to relate the knowing self to the world beyond it. In her terms, the task of philosophy from the early modern period to the 20th century was to create the “narrow shaky gangway between the two towers of the Knower and the Known.” But the unassailable, solitary thinker that served as the foundation of Descartes’ philosophy requires, Midgley writes, an account of human knowledge which women’s whole experience falsifies […] I wonder whether [he] would have said the same if [he] had been frequently pregnant and suckling. Maternal experience, consciousness, relationality and the embodied self vitiate Descartes’ scepticism and solipsism. Reading Midgley, one wonders just how many philosophical puzzles would dissolve were philosophical inquiry to begin from the maternal, rather than the male, body. Still, despite Midgley’s incisive reflections, a BBC editor cancelled her radio appearance in the mid-1950s on the grounds that her remarks were a “trivial, irrelevant intrusion of domestic matters into intellectual life”. (A script of this radio appearance was recently unearthed in her home in Northumbria and made public some 60 years after it was first written.) Matrescence Throughout the history of Western culture, women’s pregnancies and postpartum experiences were written about, but hardly ever from a woman’s perspective and scarcely in positive terms. As Quill Kukla, a contemporary American philosopher, has argued, pregnant and newly maternal bodies were a source of intellectual and visceral anxiety to the people – mostly men – that wrote about them. Unlike male bodies, women’s bodies were thought to be unbounded due to their capacity to produce life and nurture it postpartum. If women did manage to write about their experience on the sly, their philosopher contemporaries rarely believed these curious themes to be within the bounds of philosophy, proper. Moreover, it is not until very recently that we had a term to convey the experience of people who have given birth: matrescence. Coined in 1973 by medical anthropologist Dana Rapheal, this watershed term captures a period of “mother-becoming” in which the social and biological transformations brought about by childbearing and/or raising effect myriad changes to a person’s physical, emotional, social and inner life. These take place alongside changes to the activities a person undertakes and the relationships they form. Any sleep-deprived new mother who has found themselves squeezed and prodded in the brightly lit office of lactation consultant, as I did, can attest to how strange and estranging this social and physical transformation can be. And while not everyone experiences the maternal transformation Rapheal describes – mothers need not have given birth and there are many ways to mother – it’s nevertheless remarkable to note the long absence of these experiences from our intellectual discourse. Of course, I’m not alone in feeling the experience of matrescence was hidden from public view. Lucy Jones, author of the bestselling Matrescence: On the Metamorphosis of Pregnancy, Childbirth and Motherhood writes that until she became a mother she had never seen a painting of childbirth, heard a song about pregnancy, read a book about the loss of self in early motherhood or watched a play about maternal mental illness. why has philosophy ignored motherhood? Penguin Books Given the incidence of postpartum anxiety and depression among new parents, this is all the more damning. From du Châtelet’s fears to Kempe’s despair, from Masham’s advocacy to Midgley’s criticism, we inherit a fragmented but persistent tradition of women insisting motherhood is significant. The recent emergence and widespread success of books exploring matrescence suggests we are on the cusp of a cultural shift. Matresence need not remain hidden from view or whispered in mothers’ groups: it deserves its place in our intellectual, artistic, and public imagination. How, then, can our discipline explore the metaphysical, ethical, aesthetic, conceptual, linguistic and political dimensions of pregnancy, labour and motherhood to make sense of our rich but diverse experiences? If philosophy is to be a way of life, what does it need to become to serve mothers in their exploration of the transformation they experience? We owe it to ourselves to uncover voices from the past that whispered their maternal experience, to explore narratives of matrescence and to reexamine philosophy’s taken for granted topics in this new light. Refusing to accept its historical neglect, making mother-becoming a subject of philosophical inquiry, is a long overdue and necessary act of imaginative and intellectual resistance. Authors: Laura Kotevska, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, University of Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-why-has-philosophy-ignored-motherhood-270163

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